Listen: Megadeth Streaming New Song, "Super Collider"

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Megadeth are streaming the title track from their new album, Super Collider, over at their YouTube page, MegadethTV.

You can check it out below.

The song also is available at iTunes now for $1.29. Super Collider — the album — is scheduled for a June 4 release via Dave Mustaine's new label, Tradecraft, which is distributed by Universal Music Enterprises (UMe).

["Super Collider"] kind of came from that 'Symphony of Destruction' corner of my mind," Mustaine told Guitar World in the new June 2013 issue. "You can’t always play aggressive, thrashy stuff. Sometimes those aren’t even songs; they’re like musical rams.

"But because I’m not a pop guy, I’m also not really comfortable playing sing-along songs. To me, 'Super Collider' made sense like a normal song — a verse-chorus-verse-chorus kind of thing. It’s written the way a real songwriter would write the song, instead of just taking all these musical twists and turns."

For the Megadeth story and more, including sidebars on Jackson Guitars' Chris Broderick Pro Series Soloist model and Dean Guitars' Dave Mustaine Signature Series, plus features on Louder Than Hell: The Definitive Oral History of Heavy Metal, Alice In Chains' Jerry Cantrell, Adam Jones of Tool, the history of Epiphone guitars and more, check out the June 2013 issue at theGuitar World Online Store.

Comments

Just a few short years ago we had Mustaine complaining that Marty was the reasoning behind all the 'experimental and slower' stuff... but this proves to me that Dave pretty much has a big mouth and likes to blame others in his band for stuff that sucks. This is as bad as 'Crush Em'... especially that lil' 'Huah'... and live they no longer have balls... Metallica and these guys need to go to a nursing home and just quit and leave it to Slayer and Anthrax.

Dave said:
To me, 'Super Collider' made sense like a normal song — a verse-chorus-verse-chorus kind of thing. It’s written the way a real songwriter would write the song, instead of just taking all these musical twists and turns."

What I hear when I read that statement and listen to this song:
Radio Rock.